More updates on this from the BBC:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-15953876
Tez, does your training include the ins-and-outs of the law regarding the protection of diplomatic territory in foreign parts?
I ask because my impression was that, ultimately, the host country was responsible for the security of the embassies and that failing to protect them was a severe breach of the international agreements that make diplomacy possible? Likewise, are actions carried out within the embassy not subject to the laws of the host country?
If those suppostions are right, then the armed forces guarding the compound would technically have been in the right whatever they did to the mob (as long as it not break British law or the RoE). But there is indeed a gulf between what you can do and what is best to do. So, altho' viscerally I agree with David that it would have been good to see our embassy being more vigorously defended, it would very probably have been a bad thing to do in the end.